Stuff other people have written:

Snoopy and the Red Baron, an ASCII art comic by
my dad. He wrote it in the 1960s, so for all I know it was actually EBCDIC art.
Remember to view this file in a monospace font!

Short descriptions of some of the above stuff I've written:

Roger M. Wilcox proudly presents . . . (drum roll) . . .
The Internet Stellar
Database! Get all the latest dirt on your favorite stars! Build
your own interstellar empire and save a bundle! Science fiction
enthusiasts especially will find this site a welcome relief from all the toil
they usually have to exert just to find out seemingly straightforward facts,
like how long the "year" would be on an earthlike planet orbiting Sirius B, or
how far it is from Alpha Centauri to Wolf 359.

Thinking about renouncing your Social Security number? Did an article
called "The Story of the Buck Act" convince you? Well, don't believe a
story just because it sounds attractive. Read
Debunking "The Story of the Buck Act" for a less
conspiratorial treatment of 4 USC 105-110.

And speaking of debunking, I've also ventured into taking on the mountain of
pseudoscience and pseudotheories that is Orgonomy. Read my ever-expanding
Skeptical Scrutiny of the Works and Theories of
Wilhelm Reich. Warning: Reich's life works covered a lot of
different topics, so in order to be thorough, this series of debunking articles
of mine is looooooooooooooooong.

The Year 2000 Problem wasn't the only time-bomb lurking in most software.
The next critical year is 2038, for reasons quite different from the ones
causing the so-called Millennium Bugs. Read about it in
The Year 2038 Problem.

A few of my old stories are now available on-line
in their own little web-cubby hole, including Gaea's Rising, the 1985
rewrite of Tracer, and a host of other (ahem) immortal classics.

I used to play a superhero role-playing game called Champions®. A lot. So much so that my stack of character sheets
grew to over an inch-and-a-half thick. Of my Champions characters, Tracer (the
4th one I ever made) was my favorite — so much so that I wrote a
near-novelette-length account of his origin story, and ended up using "tracer"
as my favorite online username, nickname, and/or handle.

Some of my parody screenplays can be seen
on-line, as well. None of these were ever intended for actual movie or TV
production, of course.

For those of you dying for the glorious sounds of my singing voice accompanying
my unforgettable classic original songs, I've done the next best thing: I've
compiled a MIDI sing-along page containing MIDI files of
songs I've written along with lyrics for those songs, so you can sing along and
imagine it's my voice you're hearing.

I have some audio cassettes in my collection that contain music recorded
nowhere else. Now, some of these are available in digital-audio format
on my Digital-audio rescue page. I've
also recorded some of my songs which have never been on cassette or any
other analog medium before; these are on my Digital-audio
recordings page.

But for a real blast from my literary past, you AD&D fans should take a gander
at my Intercontinental Union of Disgusting Characters
webpage. It's got murder. It's got mystery. It's got
romance. It's got disgustingly powerful characters, the kind only a
munchkin would enjoy role-playing, beating the crap out of one another.
Did you know there's a sequel on this page, and character sheets for all the
major characters, too?

Hnakra Wars: The wargame based on C.S. Lewis's
Out of the Silent Planet. Sort of.

Death Munchkin! is a role-playing game I'm
still in the process of developing. It's my attempt to make Steffan
O'Sullivan's
FUDGE
system amenable to munchkin-style powergaming.

The Pentagon War is a science
fiction novel I've tried off-and-on to write ever since 1980. It's still
nowhere near being finished yet. Meanwhile, The
Pentagon War game was a game based on The Pentagon War. I
began writing the game in 1983, and have never really finished it,
either. The game system borrows heavily from Task Force Games' Star
Fleet Battles.

I used to think rec.arts.tv.mst3k.misc resembles rec.humor. Now I think
it more closely resembles alt.romance.chat. See what I mean by reading my
list of The Real-Life Romances of
r.a.t.m.m.